Just last week, I saw a poor little dog (a King Charles Cavalier) that had ingested a Sago Palm seed. The owners had a buried fence that stopped short of the Sago Palm Plant, but a seed had fallen ...
Garden columnist Dan Gill answers readers' questions each week. To send a question, email Gill at gnogardening@agcenter.lsu.edu. Something odd is going on with my sago palm. It has produced a round, ...
Minutes after ingesting sago palm seeds they found in their South Carolina yard, dogs Maisy and Murphy were vomiting continuously and in desperate need of medical help Stephanie and Tony Evans are ...
SAGO WARNING: The seeds produced in the dome-shaped cone of female sago palms (Cycas revoluta) are ripening now and are highly toxic to dogs. However, something about the taste of the fleshy red outer ...
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — The Evans family wants to get the word out to fellow dog owners. "It amazes me there's something that could be eaten one day, and a dog would die the next day. It's that toxic." ...
The tropical sago palm is a popular landscaping choice for homeowners, but veterinarians in particular know a different side of the plant. Every part of the sago palm is poisonous to man and beast, ...
Read full article: DCPS puts Southbank headquarters back on the market after failed agreement with Chase Properties If you’ve ever visited Brunswick, Georgia, or Mount Dora, Florida, you should ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The lush, long-living Cycas revoluta plant isn't actually a palm at all, though its foliage looks like palm fronds. Sagos are part ...
One recent evening Courtney Lee let her family’s golden retrievers into her Wilmington Island house from the backyard and was taken aback when one of the dogs started throwing up. Thirty minutes later ...
Sago palms are no strangers to Houstonians. In fact, they tend to be overplanted in the area, so it’s hard to ignore their physical presence; they display an elegant robustness. They can be found ...
The Sago palm, Cycas revoluta, of course, is not a palm at all, but a gymnosperm, and thus more closely related to pine trees than palms. The botanist in me wants to remind you that gymnosperms are an ...